Solid-State Synthesis of Aluminophosphate Zeotypes by Calcination of Amorphous Precursors.
Shuo TaoZhili WangLei WangXiaolei LiXue LiYujie WangBo WangWenwen ZiYing WeiKuizhi ChenZhijian TianGuang-Jin HouPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Because of the growing interest in the applications of zeolitic materials and the various challenges associated with traditional synthesis methods, the development of novel synthesis approaches remains of fundamental importance. Herein, we report a general route for the synthesis of aluminophosphate (AlPO) zeotypes by simple calcination of amorphous precursors at moderate temperatures (250-450 °C) for short reaction times (3-60 min). Accordingly, highly crystalline AlPO zeotypes with various topologies of AST , SOD , LTA , AEL , AFI , and -CLO , ranging from ultra-small to extra-large pores, have been successfully synthesized. Multinuclear multidimensional solid-state NMR techniques combined with complementary operando mass spectrometry (MS), powder X-ray diffraction, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and Raman characterizations reveal that covalently bonded fluoride in the intermediates catalyze the bond breaking and remaking processes. The confined organic structure-directing agents with high thermal stability direct the ordered rearrangement. This novel synthesis strategy not only shows excellent synthesis efficiency in terms of a simple synthesis procedure, a fast crystallization rate, and a high product yield, but also sheds new light on the crystallization mechanism of zeolitic materials.